Becoming an adult does not happen overnight; it occurs over time and in steps.
Letting go is a difficult but also rewarding part of life.
Help your teen learn the responsibilities that come with being an adult.
Relating to your child as an adult is new for both you and your child.
For example:
Going to college
Moving out
Starting a job
Staying at home
Learning to be independent does not happen overnight. Just like getting a driver's license, it occurs over time and in steps.
Learner's permit—learning new skills with supervision
License with limitations—taking on some responsibilities, but with parental support
Full license—being fully responsible for one's own actions
Parents need to give up much of the control over many of their young adult's decisions. But parents still worry about their child's safety, health, and success. This is where you need to trust the job you have done as a parent.
Parents give guidance and feedback to their children at every age, but giving advice to a young adult is different from telling a child what to do or teaching a child how to do something.
Young adults need to know that everybody needs advice and help from others for the rest of their lives. Parents now need to be open to getting advice and feedback from their adult children.
Open and honest communication is key. Even though some topics may be difficult or even embarrassing for you, this is the basis of a healthy adult relationship with your child.
There may be times when you do not agree with each other, and conflicts may occur. Try not to let getting mad or angry turn into a fight. Fights don't solve problems; they make new ones.
Solve problems and conflicts with respect for your teen. Acknowledge and apologize when you are wrong. This is an excellent way to teach your child how to peaceably solve conflicts with others.
As teens gain the privileges that come with being adults, they need to understand the responsibilities toward others and the community that come with these privileges. Decisions that adults make have adult consequences, both good and bad, that they will need to live with.
Parents need to stop doing things for their teens, like making lunch or running an "emergency" load of wash, that teens can do for themselves. Parents who complain most bitterly about their teens' irresponsibility are often the ones who don't make their kids do anything for themselves.
There is no need to come up with special punishments to discourage irresponsibility.
Simply let nature take its course.
Forgotten homework assignments result in lower grades or having to do make-up work.
Not putting clothes into the hamper means that there might be nothing but dirty clothes to wear.
Of course, it is hard to stand by and see your child suffer embarrassment or defeat. A parent naturally wants to jump in and help. Remind yourself that the most helpful thing you can do is allow your child to learn to take responsibility, the sooner the better.
When you are seen as a source of ready cash, your child has no incentive to handle money responsibly. Decide on a fair amount, and discuss how to budget by spending a little and saving for larger purchases. Then refuse to pay for any items that are not needed. If teens don't have money for something they want, they soon will learn to budget.
Teens who have trouble staying organized can appear irresponsible. By teaching specific skills, like always putting keys in a particular spot, you are helping your child become a responsible adult.
Adolescents make large, life-changing decisions, like whether to drink, smoke, have sex, or go to college. They also make smaller but still important decisions, like whether to try out for soccer or use the time for studying or an after-school job.
One way to help with decisions is to sit down together and actually write down the answers to the following questions:
What is the difficulty?
What are possible solutions?
What are consequences of each solution?
Which of those consequences is most desirable from a
As children become adults, the way children and parents relate needs to change. The goal is to respect each other as adults.
Parents want to hear about how their "kids" are doing. It is also important for children to know "what's going on" with their parents.
Having lunch or dinner together is a good way to keep up-to-date with each other and have fun at the same time. Don't stop being interested in each other's lives.
Whether the chores are divided up using a formal schedule or everyone just pitches in when they can, everyone needs to help out at home.
You might want to have a family meeting to decide who does what. It's all about fairness.
Teens and young adults need to know that they can't play their music so loudly that it disturbs others. Everyone needs to pick up clothing and other items in spaces they share, especially hallways and bathrooms.
Even in small homes, providing teenagers with a space to call their own is important. This allows them the freedom to express themselves and to develop their own sense of self-discipline.
For example, they can decorate their room as they wish and keep it as messy or neat as they choose, within reason. It is within your rights to insist that a room be picked up if it starts to smell bad or affects the home.
Parents always will be concerned about their children. But as children get older, they need to begin to assume some responsibility for their own safety.
For example, when parents communicate curfews as a matter of safety, it is more likely to be accepted. Teens and young adults need to know that if they are not able to make the curfew, they need to get in touch with the person who is waiting up for them.
Copyright © 2006 AAP Feed run on: 9/23/2024 Article information last modified on: 1/24/2022
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